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Apr 24, 2011
04/11
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FOXNEWS
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we gathered all these truths about npr and the head of npr resigned after it. >> john: let's talk about the process because you are sure they are going to figure it out? >> it takes creativity but we think it's lacking in the mainstream media. others refuse to go into these groups. in acorn it ties the president of the united states, obama was an attorney for acorn. >> john: and they got $30 million a year? >> and they were allocated personally billions more in a stimulus page. a friend of mine sent me a facebook message. hannah, 20 years old, we had to spend our own money to fly around the country and drive around and go into these offices i believe that the media wouldn't touch it. so we did the job. >> john: another group. i was confused about this, investigated planned parenthood but that is also a group supported by the left that gets government money. in these cases, acorn, npr, the planned parenthood sting, it was sort of a private space, a place for the people have a than expectation of privacy. given how much your enemies hate you, i am surprised that you haven't taken grief fr
we gathered all these truths about npr and the head of npr resigned after it. >> john: let's talk about the process because you are sure they are going to figure it out? >> it takes creativity but we think it's lacking in the mainstream media. others refuse to go into these groups. in acorn it ties the president of the united states, obama was an attorney for acorn. >> john: and they got $30 million a year? >> and they were allocated personally billions more in a...
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Apr 23, 2011
04/11
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FOXNEWS
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we gathered all these truths about npr and the head of npr resigned after it. >> john: let's talk about the process because you are sure they are going to figure it out? >> it takes creativity but we think it's lacking in the mainstream media. others refuse to go into these groups. in acorn it ties the president of the united states, obama was an attorney for acorn. >> john: and they got $30 million a year? >> and they were allocated personally billions more in a stimulus page. a friend of mine sent me a facebook message. hannah, 20 years old, we had to spend our own money to fly around the country and drive around and go into these offices i believe that the media wouldn't touch it. so we did the job. >> john: another group. i was confused about this, investigated planned parenthood but that is also a group supported by the left that gets government money. in these cases, acorn, npr, the planned parenthood sting, it was sort of a private space, a place for the people have a than expectation of privacy. given how much your enemies hate you, i am surprised that you haven't taken grief fr
we gathered all these truths about npr and the head of npr resigned after it. >> john: let's talk about the process because you are sure they are going to figure it out? >> it takes creativity but we think it's lacking in the mainstream media. others refuse to go into these groups. in acorn it ties the president of the united states, obama was an attorney for acorn. >> john: and they got $30 million a year? >> and they were allocated personally billions more in a...
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Mar 10, 2011
03/11
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FOXNEWS
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ron shiller has also resigned from npr. he thought he was at a meeting with members of muslim organization, when, in fact, they were conservative activists working with james o'keeffe, the undercover operative on a sting operation. take a look at what he said. >> it feels to me as though there is a real intellectual move on the part of a significant part of the republican party. it's not republicans. the current republican party, particularly the tea party, is fa gnatcally involved in people's -- fanatically involved in people's personal lives and very fundamental christians. basically, they believe in sort of white, middle america, gun-toting. it's scary. >> judge napolitano: fanatical christians who are a bit scary. how does the tea party feel about the comments? jenny beth martin, national coordinator of tea party patriots. welcome to the "glenn beck program." were you surprised at all to hear this character from npr characterize people who bereave in maximum individual liberty, small government and fidelity to the const
ron shiller has also resigned from npr. he thought he was at a meeting with members of muslim organization, when, in fact, they were conservative activists working with james o'keeffe, the undercover operative on a sting operation. take a look at what he said. >> it feels to me as though there is a real intellectual move on the part of a significant part of the republican party. it's not republicans. the current republican party, particularly the tea party, is fa gnatcally involved in...
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Jul 23, 2011
07/11
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WBAL
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he once told npr, i don't want to abolish government, we want to reduce it to the size where he can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub. andrea mitchell, nbc news, washington. >> up next, the royal wedding dress and the princess who wore it. great britain's new crown jewel. happened to come across quicken loans online. [ chris ] walked over to the computer... i was able to see all the paperwork. while i was on the phone, i was able to go through the checklist. [ kathy ] they were quick and efficient. quicken loans is definitely engineered to amaze. they were just really there for us. i don't always have time to eat like i should. that's why i like glucerna shakes. they have slowly digestible carbs to help minimize blood sugar spikes, which can help lower a1c. [ male announcer ] glucerna. helping people with diabetes find balance. [ male announcer ] glucerna. when your eyes are smiling... you're smiling. and when they're laughing... you're laughing. be kind to your eyes... with transitions lenses. transitions adapt to changing light so you see your whole day comfortably.
he once told npr, i don't want to abolish government, we want to reduce it to the size where he can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub. andrea mitchell, nbc news, washington. >> up next, the royal wedding dress and the princess who wore it. great britain's new crown jewel. happened to come across quicken loans online. [ chris ] walked over to the computer... i was able to see all the paperwork. while i was on the phone, i was able to go through the checklist. [ kathy ]...
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Jul 22, 2011
07/11
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FOXNEWSW
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chris s the president, you know, he's had interviews with npr, today he was in maryland at this university. is the president signaling that he may be getting close to agreeing to a deal that would raise this debt ceiling and that would have no tax hikes in it? >> reporter: well, he'll have to give his base something. he can't expect them to walk into this without even a symbolic tax increase. but, yes, obviously, what's happening now is the president is trying to soften the blow for his supporters being in a deep blue, very liberal state like maryland, being on a college campus be, rallying supporters in if a campaign-style event and, as you said, going on national public radio. these are all efforts on the president's part to reach out to liberals and say, look, i don't want to do a deal like this, but i have no choice so please understand me as i have to do this. martha: all right. we've got another piece of sound we want to play for everybody in relation to this. >> in order for us to solve the debt deficit problems, we've got to cut spending that we don't need, we have to eliminate pro
chris s the president, you know, he's had interviews with npr, today he was in maryland at this university. is the president signaling that he may be getting close to agreeing to a deal that would raise this debt ceiling and that would have no tax hikes in it? >> reporter: well, he'll have to give his base something. he can't expect them to walk into this without even a symbolic tax increase. but, yes, obviously, what's happening now is the president is trying to soften the blow for his...
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Mar 8, 2011
03/11
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CSPAN
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now you are at npr. there is a question about that broad background as opposed to the ready of background. first of all, can you talk about your memories of listening to radio growing up, and other than listening to npr what do you listen to now? >> i grew up in the 1960's and early 1970's in new york. i mostly listened to am pop music. i came late to npr, because for most of the 1980's, i was living abroad. i can tell you the first time that i really listened and honed in on it. i first target dating my husband, who is here somewhere -- there he is. i just previously move back into the country, and he had npr on, and i was hooked on npr and on him. those two things are linked. >> we hope it stays around if only to keep your marriage -- here is a question. this is news to me, but npr engineers are complain that they're being made obsolete and the strength of the networks and is not what was traditionally. that is not the only question that we got along those lines, but there's a feeling in some quarters
now you are at npr. there is a question about that broad background as opposed to the ready of background. first of all, can you talk about your memories of listening to radio growing up, and other than listening to npr what do you listen to now? >> i grew up in the 1960's and early 1970's in new york. i mostly listened to am pop music. i came late to npr, because for most of the 1980's, i was living abroad. i can tell you the first time that i really listened and honed in on it. i first...
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Mar 8, 2011
03/11
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CSPAN
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now you are at npr. there is a question about that broad background as opposed to the ready of background. first of all, can you talk about your memories of listening to radio growing up, another than listening to npr what do you listen to now? >> i grew up in the 1960's and early 1970's in new york. i mostly listened to am pop music. i came late to npr, because for most of the 1980's, i was living abroad. i can tell you the first time that i really listened and honed in on it. i first target dating my husband, who is here somewhere -- there he is. i just previously move back into the country, and he had npr on, and i was hooked on npr and on him. those two things are linked. >> we hope it stays around if only to keep your marriage -- here is a question. this is news to me, but npr engineers are complain that they're being made obsolete and the strength of the networks and is not what was traditionally. that is not the only question that we got along those lines, but there's a feeling in some quarters th
now you are at npr. there is a question about that broad background as opposed to the ready of background. first of all, can you talk about your memories of listening to radio growing up, another than listening to npr what do you listen to now? >> i grew up in the 1960's and early 1970's in new york. i mostly listened to am pop music. i came late to npr, because for most of the 1980's, i was living abroad. i can tell you the first time that i really listened and honed in on it. i first...
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Sep 29, 2011
09/11
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CSPAN
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. >> i'm a blogger for npr. i am also part of their social media team, which started off about three years ago, and it was an evangelizing thing, and now we manage the facebook page and npr social media presence as well as cloud experiments. >> the structure of our organization for this conversation, i want to throw out a framework for the program, and that is when i look at media companies and we talk about each individually at various times, when you look at the landscape and you try to evaluate what news organizations are doing, three stocks are at the back -- three stocks are at the back of the envelope. how content is generated, distributed, and been monetize. each of those three areas today, we will have each of the panelists talked about how their organizations see as the trends that have changed in both those categories. the content generation side, when we look at the last five years, how the newsroom hierarchy's have change, where was the hierarchy before, what does it mean in terms of how we get a con
. >> i'm a blogger for npr. i am also part of their social media team, which started off about three years ago, and it was an evangelizing thing, and now we manage the facebook page and npr social media presence as well as cloud experiments. >> the structure of our organization for this conversation, i want to throw out a framework for the program, and that is when i look at media companies and we talk about each individually at various times, when you look at the landscape and you...
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Feb 24, 2011
02/11
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CSPAN2
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we love npr. we can't imagine life without npr, and we are either to be part of the conversation about what the future will be in npr. tonight we have a stellar panel of journalists discuss the past, present and future of npr. it's my great honor, susan stamberg is the voice you heard in your head when you think of npr. she is one of the pioneers of npr. she's been on staff since the network began in 1971 and is the first woman to anchor a national nightly news program. she has won every major award in broadcasting and i will not list are members accomplish this but you should know in addition to being an acclaimed broadcast journalist she is also the author to books and coeditor of the third, talk npr. susan stamberg all things considered book and coeditor. plus a wonderful book we're here to celebrate tonight. geneva overholser is director of the school of journalism at the university of southern california annenberg school of communication and journalism. she is appealed surprise -- correction,
we love npr. we can't imagine life without npr, and we are either to be part of the conversation about what the future will be in npr. tonight we have a stellar panel of journalists discuss the past, present and future of npr. it's my great honor, susan stamberg is the voice you heard in your head when you think of npr. she is one of the pioneers of npr. she's been on staff since the network began in 1971 and is the first woman to anchor a national nightly news program. she has won every major...
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Mar 18, 2011
03/11
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WTTG
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many republicans believe npr leans left while democrats say npr is a quote voice of reason. critics say the bill will prevent smaller public stations especially in rural areas to have funds to buy popular shows. the bill is unlikely to pass the in the senate. president obama says he will not sign the bill snoot mayor of baltimore did not break any ethics laws, that's the assessment of baltimore's top lawyer. he says mayor stephanie rollings blake did not violate the city's ethics code when she signed checks for johns hopkins university. the city's ethics law prohibits voting on contracts if they have a financial interest. >>> we have plenty coming up on fox 5. a big event in the auto industry this weekend in our area. up next the world's first pass produced all electric car and you can take it for a test drive too. we're going to take you behind the wheel coming up. >>> we're starting the weekend off on a wonderful note. wait until you see how high our temperatures will rise. we have the details coming up. stay with us. we'll be back after the break. >>> a nasa spacecraft
many republicans believe npr leans left while democrats say npr is a quote voice of reason. critics say the bill will prevent smaller public stations especially in rural areas to have funds to buy popular shows. the bill is unlikely to pass the in the senate. president obama says he will not sign the bill snoot mayor of baltimore did not break any ethics laws, that's the assessment of baltimore's top lawyer. he says mayor stephanie rollings blake did not violate the city's ethics code when she...
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Aug 8, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 60
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there's a certain npr label that goes with it. and, you know, i think that's something that news organizations didn't worry about because it was staff-produced. the networks began to farm out and hire freelancers a lot earlier than most other television networks, a lot of other media. but it's really becoming more and more ironic, i think, in an era where there's a perception again that journalism is on the ropes. the content is becoming the thing. it's less important be where and who -- where and who produces it although i think there's a credibility aspect of npr, your paper and, rem, you would see it across the range in media. credibility. our own survey at the first amendment center, we do a survey every year called the state of the first amendment, and we ask certain questions every year since 1997. one of those is, concerns bias. and we've been consistently getting the last few years about two-thirds of the american public sees bias in news reports. now, at the same time almost that same number sees a role for the press as c
there's a certain npr label that goes with it. and, you know, i think that's something that news organizations didn't worry about because it was staff-produced. the networks began to farm out and hire freelancers a lot earlier than most other television networks, a lot of other media. but it's really becoming more and more ironic, i think, in an era where there's a perception again that journalism is on the ropes. the content is becoming the thing. it's less important be where and who -- where...
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May 28, 2011
05/11
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CSPAN
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npr said his remarks were inconsistent with standards and practices but npr's review of how that was handled itself revealed problems. clearly he has moved on from that and just might be doing better than ever. along with daily journalism he is the author of best selling books about the civil roots icons such as thurgood marshall his next book due out in july is called muzzled, the assault on honest debate. two months ago we had the woman who ran npr, vivian schiller, at this very podium to discuss that, among other things just between -- rather just before she, too, was let go. since then our guest has taken on an expanded role at fox news, serving as a political analyst, panelist and regular substitute host on the o'reilly factor. please give a warm national press club welcome to juan williams. [applause] >> mark, thank you very much. bob, thank you for setting this up on your maiden voyage. i hope i hold to your high standards. thank you. it's a pleasure for me to be here at the national press club and i want to thank you all for coming out today and of course i want to thank you,
npr said his remarks were inconsistent with standards and practices but npr's review of how that was handled itself revealed problems. clearly he has moved on from that and just might be doing better than ever. along with daily journalism he is the author of best selling books about the civil roots icons such as thurgood marshall his next book due out in july is called muzzled, the assault on honest debate. two months ago we had the woman who ran npr, vivian schiller, at this very podium to...
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Mar 9, 2011
03/11
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MSNBC
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npr has a real function. it plays more country music than almost anything for the red state folks. >> there you go. >> let's get on with it. >> pat buchanan? >> you have to ask yourself, why is the government funding radio when we have hundreds, if not thousands, of stations, conservative broadcasting, you have sirius satellite. some of my friends on the left have their own programs. if we're going to cut somewhere, i'm talking about bill press, for example. what with he doing funding npr? when i was in reagan's white house we called is radio ven seramos. get rid of the government funding and let them go out on their own. there are excellent programs. they have excellent country music. i listen to it sometimes coming home from church. >>> the secret taping, this is the second time something like this has been in the news, what comes to mind is the prank call. with governor scott walker. and i just -- i'm cringing, although we cover it, we have to, i guess, right? >> you have to. it's a half minute news story.
npr has a real function. it plays more country music than almost anything for the red state folks. >> there you go. >> let's get on with it. >> pat buchanan? >> you have to ask yourself, why is the government funding radio when we have hundreds, if not thousands, of stations, conservative broadcasting, you have sirius satellite. some of my friends on the left have their own programs. if we're going to cut somewhere, i'm talking about bill press, for example. what with he...
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May 27, 2011
05/11
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CSPAN
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williams at npr. incomes my calling from associated press on the print side, michelle, and she is president and the national association of hispanic journalists and a member of the national press club as well. congratulations to rafael williams, the son of our guest speaker, gist having graduated from haverford. [applause] that is fine. we can allow one round of applause. [laughter] [applause] well-deserved. we have an independent freelance journalist. she has formally worked for npr. then we had the devoted wife of our guest speaker today. skipping over the podium, bob is the senior press secretary for the natural resources defense council, and use the speaker's committee member who organize today's luncheon. first time out, great job. skipping over our speaker, greg, bloomberg news. he is chair of our npc diversity committee. he and i work together in buffalo, new york, many years ago and we're both sworn to secrecy about that. speaking of which, my colleague from the ap broadcast, in a member of th
williams at npr. incomes my calling from associated press on the print side, michelle, and she is president and the national association of hispanic journalists and a member of the national press club as well. congratulations to rafael williams, the son of our guest speaker, gist having graduated from haverford. [applause] that is fine. we can allow one round of applause. [laughter] [applause] well-deserved. we have an independent freelance journalist. she has formally worked for npr. then we...
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Aug 9, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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to npr. and i came to learn that what we have now is a very fractured media, and people really listen, read, watch through their own personal beliefs. and so what they see as bias is you're not on my side, you're not advocating for me. and that isn't the role of the news media. so i think it's a specious complaint, and no matter, i mean, within ten minutes once i got a complaint about the same story that had to do with the arab-israeli conflict, and one was npr's nothing but national palestinian radio. ten minutes later, npr's a mouthpiece for the israeli defense force, you know? the same story perceived through different lenses of personal belief. >> that's a really versatile news organization that can be both. [laughter] you know, we've had one interesting thing in the last few years, and it kind of spins off the bias question. there are a lot of people who agree with lisa, they talk about bias, they're really saying you didn't come out on my side. and what we've had with the rise of cable
to npr. and i came to learn that what we have now is a very fractured media, and people really listen, read, watch through their own personal beliefs. and so what they see as bias is you're not on my side, you're not advocating for me. and that isn't the role of the news media. so i think it's a specious complaint, and no matter, i mean, within ten minutes once i got a complaint about the same story that had to do with the arab-israeli conflict, and one was npr's nothing but national...
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Jan 28, 2011
01/11
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MSNBC
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also, of course, they want to kill npr. the latte-drinking volvo drivers who like npr. or worse, the latte-drinking train riders who listen to npr. the culture war era conspiracy theories about black helicopters and a one world government secretly pursued by america's elites, that stuff is back from the culture war eras, too. the new republican head of the house foreign affairs committee convened the first hearing of that committee this week. what's the topic? get the u.s. out of the u.n. yeah, the chairman of the republican study committee, supposedly the big policy brain trust of the republican party, what does he want to prioritize now that republicans are in control? he wants to prioritize banning gay marriage in washington, d.c. because remember, jobs, jobs, jobs. when first lady michelle obama interested as her guest to the state of the union the heroes of the tucson gun massacre and iraq and afghanistan veterans and inspirational small business owners, who did speaker of the house john boehner invite as his guests? he invited a large group of catholic school chil
also, of course, they want to kill npr. the latte-drinking volvo drivers who like npr. or worse, the latte-drinking train riders who listen to npr. the culture war era conspiracy theories about black helicopters and a one world government secretly pursued by america's elites, that stuff is back from the culture war eras, too. the new republican head of the house foreign affairs committee convened the first hearing of that committee this week. what's the topic? get the u.s. out of the u.n. yeah,...
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why npr? >> my colleague who posed as one of the members of the muslim brotherhood was prty offended with what happened with kwan williams and he suggested looking into that siincident ba in the fall. my other colleague simon temparticular came up with the idea to have a muslim angle since juan william s was fired due to his comments. >> reporter: i spoke to vivian schiller, not related to ron schiller, over the phone. >> the comments made by ron schiller are an affront to this organization and contraire to everything we stand for as a news organization. we stand for open opinions. >> reporter: as head of the fund-raising arm ron schiller is not involved in npr's news operations and his views are not aired on npr. schiller announced last week he was leaving npr for a new job. he did not flinch when the so-called muslim foundation leader says that jews run the med media. critics have long lambasted npr as slanting libberalliberal. it was cite sized for taking a grant of more than a million from
why npr? >> my colleague who posed as one of the members of the muslim brotherhood was prty offended with what happened with kwan williams and he suggested looking into that siincident ba in the fall. my other colleague simon temparticular came up with the idea to have a muslim angle since juan william s was fired due to his comments. >> reporter: i spoke to vivian schiller, not related to ron schiller, over the phone. >> the comments made by ron schiller are an affront to...
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Mar 10, 2011
03/11
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MSNBC
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this time the target was npr. he captured an npr fund-raiser making disparaging remarks about republicans and the tea party. >> white middle-america, gun-toting racists. that's scary. they're seriously racist, racist people. >> reporter: this time, this cost the fund-raiser and ceo their jobs. the timing could not be worse. the house voted to stop all funding of public broadcasting, $430 million this year. >> what kind of mission does the corporation for public broadcasting serve in these very tough economic times? >> reporter: npr says it gets only 2% of its budge fret taxpayers. most of the federal money, 71%, goes to local public tv and radio stations. losing that would hurt. >> i think we would survive without the money. would we do as good a job as we do now? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: officials say some stations would go under. also at risk programming like "sesame street." >> we have studies that prove our programs get these children ready for school, ready to learn. >> reporter: with american children
this time the target was npr. he captured an npr fund-raiser making disparaging remarks about republicans and the tea party. >> white middle-america, gun-toting racists. that's scary. they're seriously racist, racist people. >> reporter: this time, this cost the fund-raiser and ceo their jobs. the timing could not be worse. the house voted to stop all funding of public broadcasting, $430 million this year. >> what kind of mission does the corporation for public broadcasting...
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126
Jul 17, 2011
07/11
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CSPAN
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and julie rovner from npr to talk about the president's implementation of the health- care bill. that is tomorrow morning at 7:00 a.m. eastern here on c-span and c-span radio. thank you for joining us. i hope you enjoy the rest of your weekend and have a great week ahead. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2011] >> as far as how states are viewing debt discussions in washington, what concerns among chief executives like yourself? >> the concerns are two-fold. the biggest concern and the more inaction we have been out of washington, d.c., the more upset this causes in our own economies and state. consumer confidence and business confidence is affecting my economy. you can imagine my consumer confidence is down. i'm not getting revenues and it is affecting the coffers of state government. a number of those in the business community have money but have not been willing to hire simply because of the uncertainty of what is going on in washington, d.c. that really has a direct impact but not just my state. with all
and julie rovner from npr to talk about the president's implementation of the health- care bill. that is tomorrow morning at 7:00 a.m. eastern here on c-span and c-span radio. thank you for joining us. i hope you enjoy the rest of your weekend and have a great week ahead. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2011] >> as far as how states are viewing debt discussions in washington, what concerns among chief executives...
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Mar 9, 2011
03/11
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FOXNEWS
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i think they can do that but npr has a backup plan. npr is working with the federal communications commission, the fcc, to basically censor talk radio. what they're going to do is set up community advisory boards for each station that will report to the fcc on how well the talk radio station is doing on serving the community. ratings don't matter. but the opinion of this board matters. and the fcc can then find the station and give the fine to npr. and that's the plan that obama is going to be pushing this year. now, one of the things that i recommend in "revolt" is i call attention to that and i call for the house to put a rider into the fcc appropriation prohibiting this, prohibiting them from censoring talk radio or messing with it and saying if they don't do that, they'll zero fund the fcc. will the last person turn off the lights on the way out? >> i understand from your notes, one of the things they're trying to do to crack down on local stations that might run rush limbaugh or sean hannity or the brian kilmeade show, they would
i think they can do that but npr has a backup plan. npr is working with the federal communications commission, the fcc, to basically censor talk radio. what they're going to do is set up community advisory boards for each station that will report to the fcc on how well the talk radio station is doing on serving the community. ratings don't matter. but the opinion of this board matters. and the fcc can then find the station and give the fine to npr. and that's the plan that obama is going to be...
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Aug 7, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 105
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were the first first deals with npr. i've been on the board i guess since inception. and although i'm not in education field, my contributions agenda been more in entertainment side of the business, i have been so impressed with john learning matters over these years. i represent a lot of people in the media, and the balance and the quality of learning matters presents and has presented for 30 years now is to me one of the most amazing things. you see a piece of learning matters and it is balance, it is unlike today where everything has an agenda, everything is shrill. both sides get an opportunity to say your piece. in their own words, in their own matter. but john doesn't shy away from controversy. everybody is there, everybody gets their say. i'm talking that organizations. the work is top, top notch. there's nothing better on tv. there's nobody better at this than john and nobody knows this industry better than john. and he is a in a position where he presents it whether it is community colleges, if it's the best in california, school sleuth was wonderful. how to
were the first first deals with npr. i've been on the board i guess since inception. and although i'm not in education field, my contributions agenda been more in entertainment side of the business, i have been so impressed with john learning matters over these years. i represent a lot of people in the media, and the balance and the quality of learning matters presents and has presented for 30 years now is to me one of the most amazing things. you see a piece of learning matters and it is...
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Mar 10, 2011
03/11
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FOXNEWS
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npr your tax dollar money. why? >> with an increase and move over, tina fey, the movie producers just picked somebody else to play sarah palin in her big screen debut. >> happy birthday to carrie underwood. she's 28 today. ok guys, how's the family gonna use less? i'm gonna use less honey. i'm gonna text less. well, i'm gonna use less bath tissue with charmin!!! [ female announcer ] with charmin ura soft you can feel good while using less. charmin ultra soft's ultra-cushiony design is soft and more absorbent. so you can use four times less versus the leading value brand. ahh, using less never felt so good. [ female announcer ] charmin ultra soft. enjoy the go. the two trains and a bus rider. the "i'll sleep when it's done" academic. for 80 years, we've been inspireby you. and we've been honored to walk with you to help you get where u want to be. ♪ because your moment is now. let nothing stand in your way. ♪ >> in china, this is strange, an annual st. patrick's day parade has been canceled. in china. yeah.
npr your tax dollar money. why? >> with an increase and move over, tina fey, the movie producers just picked somebody else to play sarah palin in her big screen debut. >> happy birthday to carrie underwood. she's 28 today. ok guys, how's the family gonna use less? i'm gonna use less honey. i'm gonna text less. well, i'm gonna use less bath tissue with charmin!!! [ female announcer ] with charmin ura soft you can feel good while using less. charmin ultra soft's ultra-cushiony design...
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Mar 10, 2011
03/11
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KGO
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npr would definitely survive. most of the stations would survive. >> reporter: o'keefe targeted npr after it fired ron williams for saying he was sometimes nervous flying with muslims on fox news. williams unleashed on schiller. >> he wants to make it out that npr and he are the really good guys. they're the smart people. isn't it sad more people like them aren't running america. >> reporter: pbs officials say they were also invited to talk with those donors but they halted talks after the donors could not prove who they were. >>> even before she steps foot in court today, lindsay lohan has already made up her mind. reports say the actress will not accept a plea deal on her felony grand theft case because that deal would come with jail time. newly released surveillance pictures from the jewelry store apparently show a clerk waiting on lohan. the pictures show the clerk watching the actress leave with the $2,500 necklace she's accused of stealing. in the case lohan has pleaded not guilty. >>> there is more turmoil
npr would definitely survive. most of the stations would survive. >> reporter: o'keefe targeted npr after it fired ron williams for saying he was sometimes nervous flying with muslims on fox news. williams unleashed on schiller. >> he wants to make it out that npr and he are the really good guys. they're the smart people. isn't it sad more people like them aren't running america. >> reporter: pbs officials say they were also invited to talk with those donors but they halted...
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Apr 22, 2011
04/11
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CSPAN
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she is also a panelist on npr. for those of you familiar with our, you will understand when i say that her voice is often someone's engineering machine. -- answering machine. [laughter] mary matalin is a political consultant doing work with the republican party. she has been an assistant to george w. bush and counselor or vice president dick cheney. she is president of a republican publishing company. she has appeared in various documentaries and movies, some with their husband james carville. ellis henican is a contest -- columnist for newsday. he has a syndicated radio show on the talk radio network. he is also a stand-up comedian. on the cartoon network series called "sealab 2021," he is the voice of "stormy." for those of us who have no idea what he sounds like, would it be possible to hear it? >> it is like me after drinking. [laughter] >> i think this is a great topic. after a while we will have time for questions. let me throw out a job wrote to all of you -- -- jump rope to all of you -- if you want to lear
she is also a panelist on npr. for those of you familiar with our, you will understand when i say that her voice is often someone's engineering machine. -- answering machine. [laughter] mary matalin is a political consultant doing work with the republican party. she has been an assistant to george w. bush and counselor or vice president dick cheney. she is president of a republican publishing company. she has appeared in various documentaries and movies, some with their husband james carville....
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May 15, 2011
05/11
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CSPAN2
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they held an emergency meeting to get this going on defunding npr and then we'll talk about the war. and congressman lungrun stood up that we waste more money on the military than npr and you can't make that comparison because the npr is not on the constitution unlike the department and he stumbles and he hums and the idea of the national defense and he knows the constitution doesn't establish a military, whatsoever. it's written as if going to raise a military when we need it for a war. and then not have one anymore. and so then you have congressman drier stand up and taking 77 cents out of the pocket of a good american who may not listen npr is a threat to our very democracy. but taking thousands of dollars from the same person to fund the so-called department of defense, a vast of majority of which has nothing to do with defense, okay, that's acceptable. and it's unaccountable. it's unaccounted and it's secret money and it had new powers that allowed the secret transfer of money into secret campaigns. we have military operations in at least 75 nations now, considerably more than w
they held an emergency meeting to get this going on defunding npr and then we'll talk about the war. and congressman lungrun stood up that we waste more money on the military than npr and you can't make that comparison because the npr is not on the constitution unlike the department and he stumbles and he hums and the idea of the national defense and he knows the constitution doesn't establish a military, whatsoever. it's written as if going to raise a military when we need it for a war. and...
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Jun 20, 2011
06/11
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CSPAN
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cutting spending for npr, very hard, won't it. cutting spending for bullet trains to nowhere, very, very hard. this is the heart breaker of them all, cowboy poetry festivals. now that's the barn burner. and like the great and powerful oz in the movie with dorothy and scare crow and pulling that away with the lever, and that's the picture of the obama economic team right now trying to put this economy back in order. well, mr. president, the bailouts didn't work. the stimulus didn't work. i voted against them. we got to have some new sheriff in town that knows that method is a method for failure. we know what works, it's cutting spending, it's growing the economy. it's doing what free markets do and economic superpowers do. and mr. president, you are no economic superpower. i will tell you the last thing that the federal reserve would do under my administration, and that's having another quantitative policy where they are spending money, and that's not going to happen. as president obama has been in office, that dollar you hold m in
cutting spending for npr, very hard, won't it. cutting spending for bullet trains to nowhere, very, very hard. this is the heart breaker of them all, cowboy poetry festivals. now that's the barn burner. and like the great and powerful oz in the movie with dorothy and scare crow and pulling that away with the lever, and that's the picture of the obama economic team right now trying to put this economy back in order. well, mr. president, the bailouts didn't work. the stimulus didn't work. i voted...
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Aug 14, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 801
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moving from npr to nbc. nbc recognized. here is a smart woman, innovative, you know, a forward thinking. this after up. she was able to go there because she was not held under the same scrutiny in that commercial space as she has been over the last year in the public space. i would like to see equal standards being applied across the board. even as michael argued in his chapter, some of the fake news release serving as a primary new source. >> you had your hand. >> my question, the unions and all this, the voice of professionalism. what happened to them in this massive decline that has been going on? >> in a word decimated. i think that a lot of them are, a lot of union jobs. craig can speak to this as well. i don't think that they have been silent on these issues and all. >> ideas, suggestions? >> well, there have definitely been attempts to create worker owned newspapers. some have been successful. there have been other business models that had been attempted where sometimes the union members are actually exploited in the
moving from npr to nbc. nbc recognized. here is a smart woman, innovative, you know, a forward thinking. this after up. she was able to go there because she was not held under the same scrutiny in that commercial space as she has been over the last year in the public space. i would like to see equal standards being applied across the board. even as michael argued in his chapter, some of the fake news release serving as a primary new source. >> you had your hand. >> my question, the...
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Nov 27, 2011
11/11
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WETA
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. >> i am like that woman on npr. i am reading all of these books, detective stories about the venice. not much detection but a lot of eating. we have with us our special guest, linda gasparello of the -- our special guest, larry graham of the national confectioners association. he looks out for the makers of candy. there are a great number of them, aren't there? >> yes, there are. thank you for having us. >> the pleasure of hours. you brought us the goods. >> keep in joining us. there is a lot of interesting thing about candy. -- keep enjoying this. there is no other food where so many manufacturers are making the same food. we represent about 400 companies. when you think of snacks, soft drink, spaghetti, there are very few manufacturers but so many people and some companies are still entering into this business. we have a trade show every year in chicago. every year we have 30, 40, 50 new companies. a lot of artists in chocolate makers, people that come up with new lollipops. people think that it is oil and energy
. >> i am like that woman on npr. i am reading all of these books, detective stories about the venice. not much detection but a lot of eating. we have with us our special guest, linda gasparello of the -- our special guest, larry graham of the national confectioners association. he looks out for the makers of candy. there are a great number of them, aren't there? >> yes, there are. thank you for having us. >> the pleasure of hours. you brought us the goods. >> keep in...
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Nov 5, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN
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the essence of npr. when i saw acorn busting down the doors of foreclosed homes illegally, that needs to be exposed. there is a media willingness to cover up for that. how'd you get around the media? how'd you get the truth out there despite these? as time goes on you will see as investigate a plethora, why- ranging spectrum -- wide- ranging spectrum of non- conservative, not liberal organizations? host: on what topics, specifically? guest: i am concerned about the relationship between big business and big government in this country. i think the occupy wall street crowd is concerned about that, and the tea party, that is something they share in common. that is something that hurts citizens. that is something you could see us look into further. host: potomac, ore., adeline, you are on with james o'keefe. caller: i want to congratulate you on your good work. you fill a void in media, and it is not surprising they go after you. good luck in the future, and keep on keeping on, because you are doing something
the essence of npr. when i saw acorn busting down the doors of foreclosed homes illegally, that needs to be exposed. there is a media willingness to cover up for that. how'd you get around the media? how'd you get the truth out there despite these? as time goes on you will see as investigate a plethora, why- ranging spectrum -- wide- ranging spectrum of non- conservative, not liberal organizations? host: on what topics, specifically? guest: i am concerned about the relationship between big...
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Apr 19, 2011
04/11
by
WTTG
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weren't the floodgates up to keep the water out and in a statement from the pr agency representing npr real estate, there is no indication of why the gates were of not up. we spoke to a number of people who said that the gates were up sunday morning and then lored because it was a nice day and we're hearing that the gates were not opened up. the businesses scrambled to clean up the mess and reopen, and we spoke to one man on a tour boat and another who worked on the building for two decades. take a listen. >> and this is surprising. no one is able to explain why that occurred. i have been here in this building for 17 years. >> and they're approaching the warning, they will get the gites -- gates up as a precaution and sunday night, they have had 70% of the gates up and some of the gates not up, obviously. >> and back live, one couple spoke in town from greece and they started their vacation in washington, d.c., yesterday and they parked in a parking garage here and stayed in a hotel nearby and spent most of the evening trying to fish that car out and they were able to salvage a couple
weren't the floodgates up to keep the water out and in a statement from the pr agency representing npr real estate, there is no indication of why the gates were of not up. we spoke to a number of people who said that the gates were up sunday morning and then lored because it was a nice day and we're hearing that the gates were not opened up. the businesses scrambled to clean up the mess and reopen, and we spoke to one man on a tour boat and another who worked on the building for two decades....
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an npr analysis found over 600 interest groups and corporations have lobbied the super committee privately and very publicly. >> i'm not a number. i'm not a line item on a budget. and i'm definitely not a pushover. >> senior advocates want social security and medicare left alone. oil companies want to keep their tax breaks. a group called the medical im e imaging and technology alliance is pretty much warning patients will die if medicare reimbursements are cut for things like mris. and the airline industry is fighting against increases in aviation fees, and so on, and so forth. up next, we'll talk with representatives from a few of the interest groups trying to sway the committee. my skin's never been so soft and radiant. [ female announcer ] introducing sheer ribbons lotion from gold bond ultimate. [ woman ] for a softness i can feel, radiance i can see. [ female announcer ] new sheer ribbons. >>> joining me here in washington, the executive vice president of government affairs for the american petroleum institute, sean kennedy, senior vice president of global government affairs for the
an npr analysis found over 600 interest groups and corporations have lobbied the super committee privately and very publicly. >> i'm not a number. i'm not a line item on a budget. and i'm definitely not a pushover. >> senior advocates want social security and medicare left alone. oil companies want to keep their tax breaks. a group called the medical im e imaging and technology alliance is pretty much warning patients will die if medicare reimbursements are cut for things like mris....
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Mar 21, 2011
03/11
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CSPAN
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npr is a tiny piece of a trillion dollar budget. but it was important, one of those issues that is important for the conservative base. republicans were emboldened because of the recent scandals at npr. and so they decided to go for. they passed in the house. it is not expected to go anywhere in the senate and president obama would not senate -- sign it. guest: you had the issue of defunding plan. head in this cr. you liken it to the abortion debate in heth care reform. they got sidetracked on that, i would not say, but people who believe that plan parent could should not be funded by the federal government, it is not a side issue at all. it is being major lobbied on capitol hill. it will be a test of hn boehner here. how much does he not want to go through the shutdown compared to what he wants to stick with the pro-life on this. host: he continues to say he wants the open rule whichould allow anything to come to the house floor. guest: his always had the mentality of letting the will of the house do its thing. if he sees the house
npr is a tiny piece of a trillion dollar budget. but it was important, one of those issues that is important for the conservative base. republicans were emboldened because of the recent scandals at npr. and so they decided to go for. they passed in the house. it is not expected to go anywhere in the senate and president obama would not senate -- sign it. guest: you had the issue of defunding plan. head in this cr. you liken it to the abortion debate in heth care reform. they got sidetracked on...
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Dec 8, 2011
12/11
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KCSM
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eye 214
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some of them are funded by subscribers, members like those who contribute to npr, and they are starting to produce hyper local news and information for people in geographic communities. we're seeing the same thing happen with investigative projects. they're happening often state-wide, often anchored around the state capital, and i think as news moves into the future, we're gonna see a few national publications, and we're gonna see a lot of hyper local publications with some statewide investigative networks. >> jan, you won a pulitzer for public service because you actually brought change from the articles that you were writing. is that what they local sites are trying to do? are they trying to bring some sort of change? >> well, i don't know that they have an agenda other than just to connect people in their community to what's going on, allow them to know what's happening. i mean, my goodness, i live in bethesda, but i can't tell you what's going on in montgomery county because it isn't in the "washington post," you know. and it's very hard to find out what goes on in your community no
some of them are funded by subscribers, members like those who contribute to npr, and they are starting to produce hyper local news and information for people in geographic communities. we're seeing the same thing happen with investigative projects. they're happening often state-wide, often anchored around the state capital, and i think as news moves into the future, we're gonna see a few national publications, and we're gonna see a lot of hyper local publications with some statewide...
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in october, npr said ifired williams for violang its standards after a comment he made ofox news. williams saide gets nervous wh he sees peoe in muslim attire on an airplane williams went on to accept a laer role at fox. >>> the winter weather could cause a mess out the. overnight crews treated the roads to prepare for this morning's snowy cute. traysee, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. i ink we made it through oka without that mess. is is geoia and university as you can see, the snow has stopd. what we're left with is basically a wet roadway. thesroads were treated overnight. everything tt hit the ground pretty much melted even though we're dealinwith freezing temperatures. we had snow coming down really hard, butt left bary a dusting here. and as i said we were prepared for this. some pretty much the main roadways are looking gat in our area. let me show you what it looks like in another part of maryland. they have a little more snow than what we saw here in wheaton. morehan a dusting down there. you can see how it'sooking on some of the sid roads there. a little more di
in october, npr said ifired williams for violang its standards after a comment he made ofox news. williams saide gets nervous wh he sees peoe in muslim attire on an airplane williams went on to accept a laer role at fox. >>> the winter weather could cause a mess out the. overnight crews treated the roads to prepare for this morning's snowy cute. traysee, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. i ink we made it through oka without that mess. is is geoia and university as you can...
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Oct 12, 2011
10/11
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KCSM
tv
eye 31
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. >> he wasn't talking about npr. >> ok. all public media. that's fine. but the idea is that you believe -- >> and that's a challenge. >> corporations are a good thing. they get people to accumulate wealth and then they risk it and they create jobs, which is what they want to do and they create strong communities. but, they should not be running our government. >> we don't elect corporations, we elect corporations. and the corporations want whatever they want, but ultimately it falls to the politicians to act in our interests or against our interests. but, i want to switch the conversation for the moment from the corporate side of this to the political side of this. you indict the entire system by saying that the politicians accept this money and then seek to dismantle the protections that we all deserve. is, is politics beyond fixing as far as that goes? >> well, there are two things that you need to do to fix the politiccl system. the most important thing is to fix the citizens united case. we lost democracy in this country in the 1880s and 1890s. peopl
. >> he wasn't talking about npr. >> ok. all public media. that's fine. but the idea is that you believe -- >> and that's a challenge. >> corporations are a good thing. they get people to accumulate wealth and then they risk it and they create jobs, which is what they want to do and they create strong communities. but, they should not be running our government. >> we don't elect corporations, we elect corporations. and the corporations want whatever they want, but...
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Sep 4, 2011
09/11
by
FOXNEWSW
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but when npr interviewed people in the crowd in the speech they pointed to romney as the career politician because he looked like one. and i think that is going to be a tough charge for him to make. >> chris: and also if he had been more successful in 1984 he would have been a career politician. he is a failed career politician. >> right. >> chris: let me talk about one other person and that is sarah palin who once again showed up in iowa and spoke at a tea party event. here is a taste of what she had to say. >> this is why we must remember that the challenge is not simply to replace obama in 2012 but the real challenge is who and what we will replace him with because it is not enough -- >> chris: any idea what sarah palin is p up to? >> i don't know what the former governor is going to decide. she will be a factor i think whether she gets in or whether she doesn't. she is not a candidate right now but clearly shaping the debate. i have to say the message that she talked about in iowa the krone any capital iowa many is i think an underutilized discussion point and critique. barack obama is
but when npr interviewed people in the crowd in the speech they pointed to romney as the career politician because he looked like one. and i think that is going to be a tough charge for him to make. >> chris: and also if he had been more successful in 1984 he would have been a career politician. he is a failed career politician. >> right. >> chris: let me talk about one other person and that is sarah palin who once again showed up in iowa and spoke at a tea party event. here...
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Nov 10, 2011
11/11
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KCSM
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she's hosted npr's "news and notes" program and is the driving force behind the web blog pop and politics. dan rather has spent his life in news and is a highly acclaimed reporter and news anchor. he's covered major stories of our time for cbs news and now anchors "dan rather reports" on hdnet. welcome to you both. >> thank you, frank. >> glad to have you here. very different career arcs, perspectives. let me start by asking you the big question: are the media today serving the public interest? dan, what do you think? >> overall in the main, i think yes--less so than has been the case in some of our history, particularly in the period beginning just before world war ii and continuing into the mid nineties, but overall in the main, yes. journalism, particularly journalism at its best in the best traditions of the american press, serving the public good. >> farai? >> i think it depends on who you are. the biggest divide i see in who gets served with what news is actually a class divide. i feel like if you are middle or upper middle class wealthy, the way that news, particularly--take someth
she's hosted npr's "news and notes" program and is the driving force behind the web blog pop and politics. dan rather has spent his life in news and is a highly acclaimed reporter and news anchor. he's covered major stories of our time for cbs news and now anchors "dan rather reports" on hdnet. welcome to you both. >> thank you, frank. >> glad to have you here. very different career arcs, perspectives. let me start by asking you the big question: are the media...
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Mar 22, 2011
03/11
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 164
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for example, we looked at stations in alaska. 26 npr stations in alaska. almost all of them are out in the bush. for example, places like galena. they get public money. and that public money makes up 60% of their budgets. they simply don't have the staff to do local programing. the audience base does not, is not big enough to make up the difference. >> that pays for their operational costs. it pays for their electricity. it pays for certain personnel costs. a lot of the overhead in many cases there is no cash economy. >> now, both of those npr defunding bills await action in the senate. people are telling me they expect changes to be made. they don't expect the complete defunding bill of 450 million to get past the senate. everyone tells me that the threat to their funding is greater now than at any other time. jenna: interesting story to watch. dan, thank you. jon: bye-bye light bulb? looks like the end could be near for the traditional 100 watt bulb. thomas edison is rolling over in his grave. what does it mean for you? a live report, after the break. jo
for example, we looked at stations in alaska. 26 npr stations in alaska. almost all of them are out in the bush. for example, places like galena. they get public money. and that public money makes up 60% of their budgets. they simply don't have the staff to do local programing. the audience base does not, is not big enough to make up the difference. >> that pays for their operational costs. it pays for their electricity. it pays for certain personnel costs. a lot of the overhead in many...
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88
Mar 30, 2011
03/11
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WUSA
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well this week, npr reports that in texas, small town prisons built with borrowed to create jobs are short on inmates now, so municipalities are sinking under all that debt but nobody is asking how come those towns were so desperate for prison guard jobs in the first place and all across the nation, gop governors find that it pays politically to villify public employees because so many private sector workers are struggling. makes you remember the good old days about the internet bubble but let's be real. we are fresh out of bubbles so while america may be staggering back to its feet economically, many formerly middle class americans are finding themselves still stuck in a big mega story that just won't end. >>> home remedies often get passed word of mouth generation to generation, but doctors like them too, especially the ones proven to work. >> home remedy has a place because it doesn't have any side effects. >> this doctor is a washington d.c. family physician whose awls looking for natural therapies to suggest to her patients. to those who suffer from spring allergies, for example
well this week, npr reports that in texas, small town prisons built with borrowed to create jobs are short on inmates now, so municipalities are sinking under all that debt but nobody is asking how come those towns were so desperate for prison guard jobs in the first place and all across the nation, gop governors find that it pays politically to villify public employees because so many private sector workers are struggling. makes you remember the good old days about the internet bubble but...